#Waterstones Affiliate
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rosemaryhelenxo · 1 month ago
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The Cat And The City by Nick Bradley Book Review + Other Book Recommendations | Press - Affiliate
I am thrilled to grow and evolve my exclusive influencer discounts, specially curated for my fellow beauty and lifestyle fans – with this, I am now an affiliate for Waterstones! With this new partnership it means I can bring you special content, a heads up on any amazing deals coming out and other exclusive goodies! As a bookworm myself, I am very very excited to begin this great…
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emilyccannings · 2 years ago
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New Waterstones Deals - Affiliate Post
Constantly updated post where you can find all the great deals at Waterstones
I am an affiliate of Waterstones. They send me emails about offers and what promotions they are doing each month. I am creating this as a constantly updated post where you can find all the great deals at Waterstones. This week is Mental Health Awareness and as somebody who has been through a lot herself. It is great to see Waterstones curating a list of recommendations around this topic. Click…
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betterthanapokeintheeye · 1 year ago
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30 gifts for 30 days of November
Day 5!
Here is the fifth of thirty Better Than a Poke in the Eye recommended gifts for the book lover in your life even if that book lover is YOU!
Day 5’s recommendation is the Good Omens Tarot Deck and Guidebook
My Grandmother would happily tell you she was a Witch, and I inherited her gorgeous tarot card set when she moved off this mortal plane.
She loved nothing more than to spend time looking at new Tarot card sets and I am sure she would have been delighted to see a set based on one of my favourite books/tv shows. 
Featuring beautiful illustrations by Lúthien Leerghast of iconic angels, demons, Witchfinders, Professional Descendants and more, this set contains both Major and Minor arcana.
With a comprehensive guidebook by the wonderful Minerva Siegel, this set comes packaged in the beautiful gift book.  
If you love Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman’s devilishly divine world, then you will love this. 
R.R.P. is £24.98
You can purchase it through our online bookshop or through any of our affiliate links.  
Better Than a Poke in the Eye Bookshop .org
Amazon UK
Waterstones
Foyles
WHSmith
Blackwells
Forbidden Planet
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theliterarymess · 1 year ago
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⭐JOINT BOOK VOUCHER GIVEAWAY!⭐
Do you want the chance to win a £20 Amazon or Waterstones voucher? If so, this Joint Giveaway on Instagram is for you!
To give back to the bookish community, and to celebrate our new bookstagram accounts, @zyra_catherine_reviews and I are co-hosting a giveaway!
The rules are simple:
1- Head to our instas and like this post
2- Tag 2 bookish friends who would also like to enter
3- Follow zyra_catherine_reviews and theliterarymess on Instagram (and please do not unfollow - we will be checking!)
4- Tell us what books from your wishlist you want most. AND if you’d prefer an Amazon (for Ebook/Kindle readers) or Waterstones (for physical book readers) voucher
This giveaway is open to UK residents who have a book related account. It is in no way affiliated with Instagram, Waterstones or Amazon.
The giveaway will close on the 31st of July 2023, so you have a whole month to enter!
For extra entries, share this post to your story and tag us so we can see!
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richardwaserstein · 2 years ago
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Richard Waserstein
Richard Waserstein is the Advisory Board Member at Premonition.
In August, D.R. Horton filed plans with Palm Beach County for a multifamily property with 85 residential units on the land.The seller of the Jupiter assemblage is a company affiliated with Bay Harbor Islands-based real estate investment firm Waterstone Capital. Waserstein, led by Richard Waserstein, spent more than $5 million assembling the land in 2019.
Blackstone Group sold a Residence Inn by Marriott in Boca Raton for $14.25 million to a group of South Florida investors who plan to redevelop it into a mixed-use project.
The New York-based private equity giant sold the 120-room extended-stay hotel at 525 Northwest 77th Street to Shane Neman, principal of Neman Ventures; and Richard Waserstein and Mauricio Bello of Waterstone Capital. The deal equates to $118,750 per key.
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bronva · 2 years ago
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Top winter reads to get you in the festive spirit
Top winter reads to get you in the festive spirit
They’ll have you hooked like a bauble on a tree (Picture: Getty/Waterstones) This article contains affiliate links. We will earn a small commission on purchases made through one of these links but this never influences our experts’ opinions. Products are tested and reviewed independently of commercial initiatives. It’s the most wonderful time of the year – the fireplace is roaring, the tree is…
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thatdisasterauthor · 2 years ago
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Into the Background, my seek & find artbook, is available for preorder now! You can get the book via Bookshop.org, Amazon, and most other sites now, and it releases on November 8th.
The book contains 13 detailed illustrations to search through and find the hidden objects within, plus a fun micro story to go with each illustration.
Get your copy via Bookshop.org here. (Preferred place to purchase if you can, since I get a little extra affiliate bonus if you use this link.)
US Amazon
Barnes & Noble
Angus & Robertson
Blackwell's
Books-a-million
booktopia
bucher.de
Hugendubel.de
Indigo
Powell's
Waterstones
You can also request the book at your local independent shop or library!
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iambookmad · 4 years ago
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GIFTED: Sistersong by Lucy Holland
GIFTED: Sistersong by Lucy Holland
Happy monday pals! I am here with something a little different today; a book spotlight. Sistersong by Lucy Holland has quickly become one of my most anticipated releases for 2021. I was sent this gorgeous finished copy by Black Crow PR, and I didn’t realise it would be this shiny. I’ve been loving the books that Black Crow have been doing the publicity campaigns for, and I jumped at the chance…
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finnlongman · 2 years ago
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Thinking again about some of the nice things readers and reviewers have said about The Butterfly Assassin 🥰
You can buy it now from Bookshop UK*, Amazon*, Waterstones, or the local bookshop of your choice!
* Affiliate links; I earn a small commission if you buy via this link and will love you forever.
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hislopchino · 3 years ago
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Sphere launches new collectible series with Have I Got News For You quiz book
https://www.thebookseller.com/rights/sphere-launches-new-collectible-series-with-have-i-got-news-for-you-quiz-book
Sphere has signed Have I Got News For You: The Quiz of 2022 and a second quiz book for publication in November 2022 and 2023 respectively.
Emily Barrett, Sphere publishing director, acquired world rights to the books, which are the first in a new collectible series, from Hat Trick Productions.  
The publisher’s synopsis of the first book reads: “After a long uncharted year of chaos on the home and world stages, readers can challenge themselves to live through it all one more time, with rounds in the 2022 book including London’s Hottest Party Venue, Backbench MP or Charles Dickens Character?, It’s a Royal Cock-up and ’Have I Got News for You’ regular features: the Missing Words and Odd One Out rounds.  
“An ideal Christmas gift which will feature over 1,000 questions and plenty of gags on everything from politics to pop culture, Have I Got News For You: The Quiz of 2022 (and 2023) will keep readers entertained for hours and serve as timeless souvenirs of their respective rollercoaster years.”
Barrett said: “‘Have I Got News For You’ has been running for over 30 years with each episode in its prime-time Friday night slot being watched by millions; it’s a coup to be bringing such a powerhouse of a brand to the Sphere list and we’re delighted to be working with Hat Trick.
“The ideal gift for fans of the show and other quizzers besides, I have no doubt this book will be one of the biggest quiz titles this Christmas and will have a suitably special campaign to establish and support it."
Since the comedy quiz show about the news began in 1990, comedian and television personality Paul Merton and Ian Hislop, broadcaster, satirist and editor of Private Eye, have been the show’s regular team captains.
Richard Wilson, head of comedy and entertainment at Hat Trick, added: “After 32 years of making a TV news quiz, someone had the brilliant idea of doing it in book form. I can’t believe we didn’t think of it before.”
From HIGNFY’s official Twitter account : Our 2022 quiz book (the first in a brand-new annual series) is coming out in November and you can pre-order your copy now
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 You can pre-order your copy on all these links down below:
Official Link: https://geni.us/hignfybook
Book Depository (imo,the best option to pre-order for people outside the UK): https://www.bookdepository.com/Have-I-Got-News-For-You-Quiz-2022-Have-I-Got-News-For-You/9781408727102
Waterstones: https://www.waterstones.com/book/have-i-got-news-for-you-the-quiz-of-2022/have-i-got-news-for-you/9781408727102
Blackwell’s (An alternate website for people outside the UK who want to avoid Amazon affiliated websites): https://blackwells.co.uk/bookshop/product/Have-I-Got-News-For-You-The-Quiz-of-2022-by-Have-I-Got-News-For-You/9781408727102
Amazon: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Have-Got-News-You-Quiz/dp/1408727102
Official release date: 10th November 2022
Publisher: Little,Brown
Imprint: Sphere
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libraryinthecountry · 4 years ago
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★ ★ INTERNATIONAL GIVEAWAY    ★ If you could go on a book shopping spree, what section of the bookstore would you go to first?        Happy Friday, y’all!    I’ve teamed up with some incredible bookstagrammers to bring you a fantastic giveaway!        ★ ★ GIVEAWAY //    - 1 winner to win a $100 gift card to Waterstones, Barnes & Noble, or an Indie bookstore of your choice!         ★ TO ENTER //    - make sure you’re following each host:    ⁑ me (@libraryinthecountry)    ⁑ @lifeinlit     ⁑ @tata.lifepages     ⁑ @literaryxqueen     ⁑ @yelli3_reads     ⁑ @thedarklingone     - like + save this post    - Answer the question of the day + tag a friend (only one comment per participant)    - Share in your stories and tag ME!         ★ FOR EXTRA ENTRY //    - comment on the other hosts’ posts and follow the rules on their photo too!        ★ RULES //    - Giveaway will end March 10th at Midnight EST    - OPEN INTERNATIONALLY    - not affiliated with any bookstore or Instagram    - must be 18 or have parents permission        ★ A NOTE //     We will only contact the winner through one of these profiles. NEVER give your credit card info to anyone!         ★ HASHTAGS //     #bookstagram #bookworm #bookphotography #bibliophile #booklover #bookaddict #instareads #bookblogger #bookobsessed #readersofinstagram #bookish #booksbooksbooks #beautifulbooks #booktag #prettybooks #goodreads #bookdragon #bookstack #bookcart #shelfie #tbrcart #bookcommunity https://www.instagram.com/p/CMC7WxJAOvX/?igshid=10srkqiw8fke9
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rosemaryhelenxo · 2 months ago
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Murder on Lake Garda by Tom Hindle Book Review + Other Book Recommendations | Press - Affiliate
I am thrilled to grow and evolve my exclusive influencer discounts, specially curated for my fellow beauty and lifestyle fans – with this, I am now an affiliate for Waterstones! With this new partnership it means I can bring you special content, a heads up on any amazing deals coming out and other exclusive goodies! As a bookworm myself, I am very very excited to begin this great partnership…
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emilyccannings · 2 months ago
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EmilyLovesLondon - Get Rec'd Episode 10
Hi All Here is this week’s podcast of EmilyLovesLondon – Get Rec’d episode 10. I have broken down the episode in case their is a particular film or section you want to listen to. There are links to the IMDB pages and a trailer. For the books there are affiliate links to bookshop.org or Waterstones:   Intro – 00:00 – 1:48 Books – 1:49 – 09:30 Survive the Night by Riley Sager – 1:49 – 4:04 –…
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betterthanapokeintheeye · 1 year ago
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30 gifts for 30 days of November
Day 9!
Here is the ninth of thirty Better Than a Poke in the Eye recommended gifts for the book lover in your life even if that book lover is YOU!
Happy Publication Day to our Day 9 recommendation which is Tiffany Aching’s Guide to Being a Witch by Rhianna Pratchett and Gabrielle Kent.
We have yet to receive our copy of this book, so whilst it has made our list, we will be writing a review once it gets here, so look out for that on our socials.
R.R.P.  £25
You can purchase it through our online bookshop or through any of our affiliate links.  
Better Than a Poke in the Eye Bookshop .org
Amazon UK
Waterstones
Foyles
WHSmith
Blackwells
Forbidden Planet
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booksandtea · 6 years ago
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Other Words for Smoke by Sarah Maria Griffin Genre: Fantasy | Horror | New Adult Length: 336 pages Published on 2nd April 2019 by Titan Books Purchase*: Amazon | Wordery | Blackwells *these are affiliate links Sarah Maria Griffin: Instagram | Twitter | Goodreads Received for free from publisher in exchange for an honest review + bought 2 copies myself
Synopsis: The house at the end of the lane burned down, and Rita Frost and her teenage ward, Bevan, were never seen again. The townspeople never learned what happened. Only Mae and her brother Rossa know the truth; they spent two summers with Rita and Bevan, two of the strangest summers of their lives… Because nothing in that house was as it seemed: a cat who was more than a cat, and a dark power called Sweet James that lurked behind the wallpaper, enthralling Bevan with whispers of neon magic and escape. And in the summer heat, Mae became equally as enthralled with Bevan. Desperately in the grips of first love, she’d give the other girl anything. A dangerous offer when all that Sweet James desired was a taste of new flesh…
Screams into the endless void about how this brilliant book with a theme of obsession is my current obsession. I first finished reading it on a Saturday night in March, I started re-reading it again the next morning.
I am not okay.
I love this book. [hi look at me being a mess on twitter 32 times]
I first heard about Other Words for Smoke when I attended an Waterstones Q+A Event of Sarah Maria Griffin and Christina Henry. Hearing these two talk was so much fun and I knew I’d have to read some of Sarah’s work because she had me awe-struck ok.
I reached out that night to Lydia about a review copy of OWFS and the rest is history. I’m history. I’m dead.
It’s like returning home, there’s a comfort I find in this book. I don’t think I’ll ever tire of it.
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OWFS follows twins, Rossa and Mae, as they spend two summers with their Great-Aunt Rita, her teen ward Bevan, and a larger than life cat Bobby. In a house that is strange than meets the eye with a Sweet James, an owl living in the walls demanding his hunger be quenched.
There are two main sections to the book; the first Summer where the twins are 14 and get sent to avoid family disrupt. And the second Summer when the twins are 17 and return to Rita’s to escape their family divorce, older and more prepared to face the different type of horror that Rita’s house holds.
“How strange was this mutual, silent agreement that maybe something was badly wrong in Rita’s house, that they’d seen something awful there that they couldn’t quite name, but  somehow they felt more able to manage that wrong than their parents.”
There are also some inbetween chapters which give us background development and the history of Rita, Audrey, Bobby,  and James. As well as some key scenes from the twins in their years between the two summers.
(Its in this part that there is forced outing which I wasn’t a fan of, but its addressed and I’m happy with how Mae stood up for herself)
Rita is the best authority figure I’ve read about. She’s both motherly and caring but also a power to be fearer. She nurtures Mae’s exploration with magic and tarot reading, she helps shape Rossa into a more confident being.
“…if this thing was evil, then he was good, and he must be able to overcome it. He just had to find the courage – he knew it was in their somewhere, but he couldn’t grasp it.”
Rossa is the character I struggle most to talk about as realistically, I think I’m most like him. Or I would be in that house, faced with that danger and horror. I can’t see me ever being brave, I can see me struggle to keep a float, wanting to keep my sister safe, but not having the courage to face it. And feeling a bit of an outsider to the others in the house who’ve all formed a strong bond.
I think he is at his strongest when he’s not at ends with Mae. The two together have a great dynamic together in the book and I lived for the two supporting each other through the toughest times, and their sibling banter.
“A troupe of sunflowers, standing tall and there – there suddenly like a jewel on the lawn, Bevan sprawled out under the sun on a tartan blanket, her flat stomach to the sky. Her legs a hundred miles of tan.
Oh no.”
Bevan’s blonde hair and “her unfair, impossible legs” help Mae develop the strongest and ever-consuming of crush’s. Mae’s chapters were honestly my favourite to read because SMG has nailed down that First Crush obsession, how it engulfs your every fibre, and you want to do everything to leave a good impression – even allow them to pierce your ears, which terrifies you.
Bobby is a good soul whilst Mae battles with all these feelings engulfing her. He is larger than life, and more than what he seems. But his secret is something earned when the twins are ready and it takes Rossa a little longer to be welcomed into the coven.
“Love is the realest thing, Mae. The world around you will become realer the more you feel it. Doesn’t music sound better already? Isn’t there more meaning? There’s a reasons you had that song on loop. It’s deepened.”
Bevan is also a storm. Mae knows this, accepts it, and both loves and fears her. Bevan is ready to set the world on fire with her anger, confidence, and naivety. Her misplaced trust in Sweet James for a share of his power and “affection” is the moving force of the plot for OWFS.
You can’t read this book and not pick up on how Sweet James is a representation of toxic relationships. He manipulates and controls Bevan to cause harm to others, and later hopes she can set him free from his chains. He is nothing to be desired.
I found it very therapeutic to be able to reflect on how abusive he is as an outsider, whilst reading about how enticed and dependant Bevan is on him and his power. How broken she is when he’s stolen away. It really is terrifying.
“…and you thought you understood all the way that he could scare you, bargain with you.”
But I wouldn’t have wanted their relationship to have been portrayed any differently as they really hooked you in. To be honest, all the characters do in this book.
The only character I haven’t spoken about yet is the queer and forever young Audrey. Her path is one we are introduced too in the second half of the book mostly. Her role is so very important, not only because it contextualises the story with the Magdalene laundries, but also she’s very interwoven with Rita and the separate paths they are both on to be hopefully be together.
I really could talk about my love for this book all day, in fact in real time I have. But honestly this is the perfect blend of fantasy and horror which I’ve been highly recommending to everyone who will listen.
I’m almost done with my second reread (I had to limit myself) and I will be annotating Beth’s copy later on. I also have my another copy going around my USA friends who’re annotating it for me.
Like I said this is pretty much my life right now.
This review probably isn’t good enough. I don’t do my intense feelings enough justice. I don’t do Sarah’s amazing writing justice.
Please read this book. Also, message me when you do.
“You lonesome?” she asked absently. “Are you? replied the cat.”
5 stars / 5 stars
If you enjoyed this post consider supporting Northern Plunder PATREON | Ko-fi | Twitter | Book Club | Blogs & Tea | RedBubble
Review: Other Words For Smoke by @griffski | #Gifted @lydiagittins @TitanBooks Other Words for Smoke by Sarah Maria Griffin Genre: Fantasy | Horror | New Adult Length: 336 pages…
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elizadoolittlethings · 6 years ago
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The Monday Interview: Mark Gatiss - Top of the League
The Monday Interview: Mark Gatiss - Top of the League 
Published: 19:14 Updated: 19:27 Sunday 16 November 2008
ALTHOUGH it's bad form to ogle someone else's husband, I can't help admiring Mark Gatiss's rather sexy legs. They seem to stretch to his neck, meeting a scruffy beard that adds a raffish edge to his air of sexual devilry. 
This tastiness is a far cry from the grotesques he's so often portrayed, from his days as a member of The League of Gentlemen, to frizzy-haired, gap-toothed Glen Bulb of Nighty Night, and Doctor Who's maniacal Dr Lazarus.
This dishiness is very on-message, since we're here talking about his third mainstream novel, Black Butterfly, starring charismatic spy extraordinaire Lucifer Box, whose adventures in bisexuality are every bit as breathtaking as his undercover work for monarch and country. Each Box novel visits a different era, allowing Gatiss to pay homage to some of his favourite authors. The Vesuvius Club, set in the early 1900s, evoked Conan Doyle. The Devil in Amber found Box battling Nazis and Stalinists, and was Gatiss's homage to Dennis Wheatley and John Buchan. Preparing for Black Butterfly, set in 1953, heimmersedhimself in Ian Fleming and contemplated the machinations of John le Carr's spies. But for all these acknowledged influences, Lucifer Box is a spy like no other. Gatiss explains: "I am a gay man who loves James Bond films and snooker – all kinds of working-class pursuits. I didn't set out to deliberately respond to themasculinity. I'mfascinatedthat somanyspieswere or are gay,but I also like the idea, which le Carr showed, that the real job is much more prosaic." Surely a great spy would be ruthless enough to shag anything? "Yes, and also back in the day, the natural people to approach were people who were already lying about themselves.When homosexuality was illegal these people already had a different identity. What's interesting is that simultaneously to recruiting known homosexuals, they were also perceived as a security risk, precisely because of the blackmail thing.The recruiters must have known and actually relied on it, but it was always a worry." "Black Butterfly" is the French nickname for depression, but here it's also the name of a nefarious drug that imbues people with a euphoric sense of infallibility – before propelling them to grisly ends.When Box is poisoned he believes that he's young again – and behaves accordingly – until the antidote is administered by the object of his affections, a dishy CIA operative called Kingdom Kum. With a respectful nod to JaneMarple, I suggest there must be special challenges in writing about a geriatric spy. "I've never been specific, but he's obviously in his late seventies. I thought the thing to do was mention every now and then how much it hurts (to leap about], but if you keep going on about it then readers stop wanting to go on the journey. You have to believe he's still in good shape even though he's very old. "I was thinking about whether therewouldbeany sex scenes and how to handle it; itmademethink that maybe I couldgetawaywith this idea of thedrugmaking him young again. "The bit when he's on the drug was my favourite part to write. I carried a notebook around and wrote in a stream of consciousness way. I found it really liberating. I'd open my eyes on a beach – what did I see? What colour are my eyelids when closed with the sun on them? I was filming in Morocco and noticed a beetle that was like a sculpture rolling down the dunes. I was trying to create very vivid snapshots." Proving that the lines between life and art blur,whilewritingBlack Butterflyhewas sent theDoctorWhoscriptthat foundhimplaying a man in search of eternal youth. "I thought, 'Oh, there's a message here,'" he jokes. At 42, he must be increasingly aware of his ownageing? "I'vebeenhavingthose thoughts since Iwas 20! Evenwhen Iwas a childI always wanted to be older. I realised just in time that it's a mistake and to enjoy my youth while I hadit. If Imeetsomeonearound20,who's a bit like I was, I want to say, 'Get out! Have fun.' Becauseyourknees start togo,myeyes aregoing. Ithappens overnight. In the car, trying to read the A-Z, I'msuddenly like my dad!" He also says he had a youthful morbid streak: "Mymumused to say I had an old soul. As long as I can remember Iwas looking backwards. I remember my mumorganised a singalong for pensioners in about 1970, and I used to love singing the old Blitz songs." He smiles. "They are called Emos now, and before that they were Goths. They didn't have a name for it when I was one, but I was that black-wearing teenager and yes, I wore a little eyeliner. I was really into horror. On the less negative side, I was fascinated by the idea that peoplehadbeenhere beforeme. Ihave a print Julia Davis (the writer and star of Nighty Night] gave me of (my neighbourhood] around the time my house was built, in the 1760s, and it has cows on it, yet it's recognisably the same street. I love that idea of the changes." This historical bent dovetails nicely with his delight in wordplay. The Box novels are peppered with silly names, which often occur to him in the bath, a site he finds conducive to deep thinking. Thus Lucifer's sister is Pandora Box, and his Black Butterfly nemesis, Melissa ffawthawte, is affiliated with nefarious baddies A.C.R.O.N.I.M. My own favourite is the "cadre of psychoanalysts-cum-mercenaries known as the Jung Turks".
Both times we've met, Gatiss has patiently explainedthat itonly looks as thoughheworks night and day, but I'msure you'll agree his output is impressive. In addition to the novel, he recentlywrote (andappearedin) an episode of Poirot, filmed the upcoming TV programme Purves & Pekkala, written and directed by Annie Griffinandfilmedhere in Scotland,and the sitcom Clone, which stars Jonathan Pryce. He's busy writing episodes of the next full season of Doctor Who, for an as yet un-cast (or so he says) Doctor.Knowinghowmuch he coveted the role, andthat he's close friendswith all involved, I try teasing an indiscretion out of him, but Gatiss remains frustratingly closedmouthed. "I haven't a clue. I found David's announcement incredibly moving. I knew he was going, but I love the fact he did it in the interval, dressed as Hamlet, and he was accepting the award, but he had to find the moment to tell everyone. He's going at the top of his game which is always the best and themost difficult thing to do, because I know he loves it." Is there a Hamlet, a Lear, or another classic role he longs to play? Without hesitation, he says, "Oh yes, Richard II. It's a very underrated play, a fabulous part – beautiful. He was a very weak king but there's this fantastic poetry about his desire to stay on the throne despite being incredibly compromised. It has that wonderful line, 'I have wasted time and now doth time waste me.' I'd like to do that." Amidall this activity, Gatiss foundtime, last spring, to get married. He and Ian have been together for nearly a decade, so I wonder if marriage changed their relationship at all. "I feel subtly different," he says. "I don't know what it is, but it's nicer. It was a lovely, very moving day. I was most moved by the notion of our families coming together. My brother said it's the best wedding he's ever beento. Itwasamazing to think that our families were so completely at ease with the whole idea of a gay wedding. And then there was the incredible irony that it took place in Middle Temple underneath a portrait of Sir Edward Carson, the man who prosecuted Oscar Wilde. So when I did my little speech the first thing I did was flick him two fingers. 'This one's for Oscar.'"
Black Butterfly is out now from Simon &Schuster (15).Mark willbein conversation about his work on 18 November at 6:30pm at Waterstone's (Sauchiehall Street) in Glasgow, 0141 332 9105; 19 November at 7pm at Waterstone's (Union Bridge) in Aberdeen, 01224592440; 20 November at 6pm at Waterstone's (West End) in Edinburgh, 0131 226 2666. For more details, contact the stores or log on to: www.simonsays.co.uk
BACKGROUND A FEW things that might surprise you about Mark Gatiss: • The League of Gentlemen won the 1997 Perrier Award for comedy, the first sketch group to win since the awards were inaugurated in 1981. • A massive fan of the show, Gatiss started writing Doctor Who novels (four to date) when he was a penniless actor. • Growing up in County Durham, he lived opposite a psychiatric hospital, where both his parents worked and where he toiled as a gardener during his first year at college. He and Ian are the devoted 'parents' of Bunsen, a Labrador retriever. • He's starred opposite Julia Davis twice –as Glen Bulb in Nighty Night, and again as Johnnie Cradock in Fear of Fanny. • In 2003 he was the script editor for eight episodes of Little Britain. • As French poet Louis Aragon, he played opposite Ewan Bremner's Salvador Dali in Surrealissimo: The Trial of Salvador Dali. The cast list included Stephen Fry (Andre Breton), Vic Reeves (Paul Eluard) and both members of The Mighty Boosh! Read more at: https://www.scotsman.com/lifestyle/the-monday-interview-mark-gatiss-top-of-the-league-1-1147037
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